- Energy Security Secretary meets with industry leaders
to discuss the Government’s energy security and business plans
to invest over £100bn, including to accelerate renewables, to
help grow our economy
- Discussions include new powers to protect critical energy
infrastructure from disruptive protest groups and maintain energy
supply
- Summit hosted at No10 Downing Street as part of Government
push to strengthen energy security, support jobs and attract
investment in the UK’s energy industry
Leaders of the UK’s energy industry will meet in Downing Street
today to discuss their plans to collectively invest over £100bn
and create jobs around the country, working with Government to
boost energy security.
Energy Security Secretary will meet a wide range of
energy companies - including EDF, SSE, Shell and BP, who
collectively have multi-billion pound plans to invest in low and
zero-carbon projects. Each of these will support thousands of
jobs across the country, which could help reduce household
energy bills while delivering cleaner, more secure sources of
energy, to deliver on the ambition to have the lowest
wholesale electricity prices in Europe by 2035.
Mr Shapps will outline Government measures to protect UK energy
supplies from disruption both at home and abroad. He will
highlight decisions to invest in home-grown energy sources –
including renewables, a revival in nuclear power, and backing
North Sea oil and gas.
But he will also highlight measures to protect critical energy
infrastructure from disruptive protests. This follows in the wake
of protests such as those at the Kingsbury and Thurrock clusters
of oil terminals and Grangemouth refinery. The Public Order Act
now includes a new criminal offence of interfering with key
national infrastructure – including oil refineries – aimed at
preventing protests from causing or threatening public safety or
serious disruption. It particularly addresses tactics that these
protesters have used such as locking on and tunneling.
Energy Security Secretary said:
“We need to send the message loud and clear to the likes of Putin
that we will never again be held to ransom with energy
supply. The companies I am meeting in Downing Street today
will be at the heart of that.
“Energy industry leaders can see that this Government will back
home-grown, secure energy – whether that’s renewables, our
revival in nuclear, or our support for our vital oil and gas
industry in the North Sea.
“But it is a sad reality that we also need to protect our
critical national infrastructure from disruptive protests.
Today I’ll be setting out what we are doing to achieve this and
want to hear from the energy companies the vital work they are
doing in this area.”
Energy firms have demonstrated their confidence to invest in the
UK, and collectively the firms meeting at 10 Downing Street plan
to invest tens of billions over the next decade in energy
projects across the country. Some of these investment commitments
include:
- Shell UK aims to invest £20-25 billion in the UK energy
system over the next 10 years. More than 75% of this is intended
for low and zero-carbon products and services.
- bp intends to invest up to £18bn in the UK to the
end of 2030.
- SSE plc have announced plans to invest £18bn up to 2027
in low carbon infrastructure creating 1,000 new jobs every year
to 2025. SSE’s plans could see it invest up to £40bn across
the decade to 2031/32.
- National Grid plc will be investing over £16bn in the
five-year period to 2026.
- EDF have outlined plans to invest £13bn to 2025.
To provide greater reassurance and support to industry, the
Energy Security Secretary will outline the range of measures the
Government is taking to protect energy infrastructure from
intentional disruption, as well as maintaining the network’s
strong resilience. This includes:
- The Public Order Act, with specific powers coming into effect
in July to protect critical infrastructure;
- Working with the Police to ensure protestors cannot gain
unauthorised access to sites;
- The work of the Civil Nuclear Constabulary, whose 1,300
officers and 300 support staff operate to protect nuclear sites
across England, Scotland and Wales
The Energy Security Secretary will also discuss progress on major
UK energy investment projects across renewable projects, oil and
gas, new nuclear, and new technologies such as carbon capture.
They include:
-
Carbon capture – earlier this week, the
Prime Minister announced two further projects in Humber and the
North East of Scotland, which can move towards becoming
clusters for this new technology – alongside eight already
being considered, and two existing clusters in the North East,
and in the North West and Wales.
-
Oil and gas – The Prime Minister has also
confirmed future licensing rounds will continue for the
extraction of oil and gas in the North Sea – while the North
Sea Transition Authority reports they have received over 115
bids from 76 companies in the latest licensing round.
-
Nuclear – companies can now register
their interest with the UK’s new organisation, Great British
Nuclear, to secure funding support to develop new technologies
including Small Modular Reactors.
-
Offshore wind – the UK has the world’s
largest operational wind farms off its shores, with plans for
further development off the East Anglia Coast and at Dogger
Bank in the North East which could collectively provide enough
clean energy for over 6.5million homes.